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Stanmore station was opened on 10 December 1932 by the Metropolitan Railway (now the Metropolitan line). [8] The station building and those on the branch were designed by the Metropolitan Railway's architect, Charles W. Clark, in the suburban style used on the company's other post-First World War stations such as those on the Watford branch.
Stanmore Village railway station was a station in Stanmore, Middlesex in the south of England (now in Greater London).Originally called simply Stanmore, it was opened on 18 December 1890 by the Harrow and Stanmore Railway, a company owned by the hotel millionaire Frederick Gordon, as the terminus of the Stanmore branch line, a short branch line running north from Harrow & Wealdstone.
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Stanmore tube station, terminus of the Jubilee line. Stanmore is the northern terminus of the Jubilee line, giving the area direct London Underground access to Central London. The Stanmore branch line to Harrow & Wealdstone station closed in 1964.
The Jubilee line is a London Underground line that runs between Stanmore in suburban north-west London and Stratford in east London, via the Docklands, South Bank and West End. Opened in 1979, it is the newest line on the Underground network, although some sections of track date back to 1932 and some stations to 1879.
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. ... Stanmore station could refer to either: Stanmore tube station, London;
Putnam Historic District, located in Zanesville, Ohio, was an important center of Underground Railroad traffic and home to a number of abolitionists. The district, with private residences and other key buildings important in the fight against slavery, lies between the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, Van Buren Street, and Muskingum River. [2]
Has much on the railroad's history, not just Harpers Ferry. Jacobs, Timothy (1989). The History of The Baltimore & Ohio. Crescent Books. ISBN 978-0517676035. Summers, Festus (1939). The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in the Civil War. Stan Clark Military Books. Hungerford, Edward (1928). The Story of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Two volumes.